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Computer experts hail Obama plan for cyber czar

by Staff Writers
San Francisco (AFP) May 29, 2009
Computer security specialists on Friday hailed US President Barack Obama's plan for a national cyber defense coordinator, calling the move a laudable first step on a tough road.

Obama said he would name a White House "cyber czar" to deter and defend against mounting criminal, espionage and hacker attacks on US government and private computer networks.

"We all know we are under attack and we are going to need to respond when there is an issue," said Symantec chief executive Enrique Salem, who was at the White House for Obama's announcement Friday.

"This is the beginning of a long journey. It's got to continue to get the president's attention and get the right budget. It can't just be an announcement today without follow through."

While enthusiastic that Obama is making cybersecurity an unprecedented presidential priority, computer defenders noted his speech lacked specifics and did not mention when a cyber coordinator will be named.

"There are still a lot of unanswered questions," said Trend Micro threat researcher Paul Ferguson.

"There needs to be a lot more collaboration from a public-private sector perspective; it is a multi-stakeholder approach to battling cyber crime. I don't envy the person that gets the job because it will be really tough."

Questions yet to be answered include what kind of authority Obama's cybersecurity coordinator will have to ensure cooperation and compliance among government agencies, contractors, and private businesses.

"It's like the government is trying to figure this out on the fly," said Jeff Moss, who runs Black Hat computer security conferences and DefCon, the world's most notorious annual gathering of hackers.

"It sets the right tone, but is light on details right now. Is this going to be a position with no budget and no intelligence gathering capabilities that sits in the middle asking for cooperation?"

It is important that Obama appoint a cybersecurity coordinator with a strong technical background and a deep understanding of the issues, according to Salem, adding it would be best the appointment was made within 90 days.

"They have a tough row to hoe," Ferguson said of whoever is appointed to the post. "I hope they have sufficient powers to produce some mandates."

A US cyber coordinator will face the challenge of balancing network security with civil liberties and privacy, according to Moss.

"How can you defend your networks without watching them?" Moss asked rhetorically.

"Can you watch government networks and not private networks that the US economy depends on? If a private network is hacked to attack the government, you are going to follow the trail back."

Obama seems to grasp the need to balance keeping the Internet open and safe with guarding the freedom and trust of users, according to Computer & Communications Industry Association president Ed Black.

"We know the pressures to deviate from this balance will be strong," Black said.

"If government agencies' security efforts overreach, the damage from privacy and civil rights violations can be just as damaging to the faith and trust in the sanctity of our communications networks as the malicious actions of terrorists and criminals."

US trade group TechAmerica called the 60-Day Cyber Security Review released by Obama's administration on Friday an "historic step" toward protecting US critical infrastructure against cyber attack.

"Protecting America from a digital 9/11 requires presidential involvement, a robust national strategy, high-level White House staff and close cooperation with the private sector," said TechAmerica president Phil Bond.

More than 80 percent of US critical infrastructure such as utility lines and computer networks are privately owned and operated but their defense calls for partnerships with government agencies, according to Bond.

"Today marks the beginning of a new era of White House leadership in cybersecurity," said Phyllis Schneck, vice president at computer security firm McAfee.

"We think this is a great first step, but there is even more hard work to be done. Cyber threats are very real, ongoing, and very dangerous."

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Obama to release cyber security report on Friday
Washington (AFP) May 26, 2009
President Barack Obama is to release the results of a 60-day review of US cyber security policy on Friday, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Tuesday. "The report is an important first step towards securing our nation's cyber infrastructure," Gibbs told reporters. "The administration recognizes the very serious threats public- and private-sector networks face from cyber crime ... read more







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